<h3>
TIMESTAMPS</h3>
A timestamp is an indication (also called a marker) which tells us at what time / when the relevant text was spoken. They are represented in the format [HH:MM:SS]; where HH are hours, MM are minutes, and SS are seconds - from the beginning of the audio or video file.
There are different kinds of timestamps as below:
1. Periodic timestamps - Periodic timestamps appear at a consistent frequency. They can appear for every 15 seconds, 30 seconds, 1 minute, or 2 minutes.
2. Paragraph timestamps
3. Sentence timestamps
4. Speaker timestamps
Time stamping format used while transcribing audio files is:
[00:00:00]
where [hour:minute:second]
so 5th minute is [00:05:00]
If the 5 - 15 minute part of an audio has to be transcribed stamping should be started at [00:05:00]
If a client requests time stamping every 30 seconds the next timestamp would be [00:05:30]
I found some possible answers:
A. “what do you think these cookies?”
B. “What is your opinion of these cookies?”
C. “How do you feel about these cookies?”
D. “How do you like these delicious cookies?”
Option D is the correct answer because the word "delicious" could effect the person's answer to benefit the cookies.
Answer:
Reflected
Explanation:
Because light will reflect off the object into our eyes
Explanation:
Indirect cross-contamination - where something helps the organisms move from one place to another. We call these 'vehicles' of contamination. Just as you would get in your car or on a bus to travel from one place to another, micro-organisms will hop on to something to travel from raw to cooked food.